“Knight and Day” stars Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz as a rogue agent and the woman he decides to take along for a ride.

MICHELLE: I”m not sure what to say — I slept through parts of this film, but that was at least in part because I”ve been an insomniac this week. My general impression was that Tom Cruise appeared to be playing someone very crazy. Possibly some method acting was involved.

ALLEN: I liked this movie. I especially liked that Tom Cruise didn”t play a sparkly vampire. There isn”t much original in this film but it is a serviceable action movie with people jumping on and off moving cars at will. Cruise does a better acting job than is required.

MICHELLE: What he”s trying to say is, we”re possibly the only people not going to the theater to see the latest episode in the “Twilight” saga. (Dear vampire freaks, both teenage and other, we”re not trying to insult your chosen brand of nerdiness. We would never do that. We”re “Star Trek” fans and you could definitely beat us up if this were still high school.)

ALLEN: In this movie Cruise gets across a world-weariness that may not just be acting. He seems a little sad and plays the character low-keyed, somewhat unusual for him.

MICHELLE: I don”t know if we saw different movies, but I saw a guy playing maniacally crazy with an overlay of spy-hero stuff. But it was in-between snores, so I might just have dreamt it.

ALLEN: Diaz has good chemistry with Cruise and the two make a decent comedy team. I like the premise of the unlimited battery that everyone wants. It was a great way to move the plot along.

MICHELLE: But the wonderful actor who plays the inventor doesn”t have much to do. Paul Dano was amazing in “There Will Be Blood.” I have to say I think “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” was a much better version of the same concept. This film is maybe a renter.

Michelle MacEachern and Allen Lunde aren”t professional movie reviewers; they”re just a married couple who like to go to the movies and can be contacted at moviecouple@hotmail.com.